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...multichannel dotcoms cheerily dip into bottomless parent-company purses, e-tailers that used to burn cash like a yuletide log have turned into Scrooges--slashing costs, scanning the bottom line and praying fervently for a Christmas Future. Sites such as eToys, whose stock has dropped 94% in a year, openly admit they will need cash transfusions by the end of 2001. "We need one more round of financing to break even," says Toby Lenk, founder of eToys. That's why grabbing an impressive chunk of the estimated $12 billion being spent online this November and December is "absolutely critical," adds...
...minutes after snapping them, so everyone who couldn't attend could see the action as it unfolded. Relocating couples could split their house- or apartment-hunting chores and keep each other up to date on their efforts: find something you like, snap a few pictures and let your spouse log on at the office or at home to see what you've discovered...
...course, I used Napster too, but you couldn't get video there," Fries says. "When I'd log into Scour Exchange, there were sometimes up to 40 terabytes of files on there, and a lot more variety [than other programs...
HOMEBOUND Only a few sites, such as insweb.com and netquote.com have offered thorough comparison shopping for homeowner's insurance. But behemoths like quotesmith.com are launching their versions early next year. If you're looking for purchasing tips and advice, log on to iii.org and insure.com The latter provides a record of complaints filed against individual insurers for most states...
DOUBLE TAKE Have America Online and Microsoft swapped playbooks? With the new AOL 6.0, you can get your address book no matter where you log on, and you can sort e-mail messages by date or sender--functions Microsoft's Hotmail has as well. AOL 6.0 also lets you get e-mail by phone and adds new character icons for your buddy list. Microsoft, meanwhile, has launched its new MSN Explorer Web browser with the warm-and-fuzzy icons and labels AOL made famous. Explorer is free and works with any Web connection, but Microsoft wouldn't mind...